Mecha82 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 2:19 pm
Yukaphile wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 1:14 pm
More Borg? Sigh... as long as the Queen doesn't show up, though, I could live with that.
While I like First Contact I have always thought that introducing Borg Queen was mistake. I always prefer Borg without anyone running thins as true hive mind. They were so much more threatening that way.
Maybe the brunette-kicking-ass-lady, who said "Do you know, who I am?" is a new Borg-Queen?
And I don't know, if the Borg-Queen was a mistake. She is always compared to a bee-queen and a beehive doesn't just beehive out of fun. It needs a purpose and that purpose is the bee-queen. Same for the Borg-Queen - the collective doesn't just do its thing out of fun, mostly because "fun is irrelevant". Every cube has its organizing "thing" via a vinculum, which transmits all ordered datastreams in the brain of the Borg-Queen, if I get this right.
I agree, that giving the borg a face is a bit on the disappointing or anti-climactic side story-telling-wise, I think if you'd apply nature to this situation, there'd be no other chance than introducing some sort of head.
I mean, sure the borg started as "there is this hive mind, flying around in its cube-shaped ships. You can't negotiate with them, you can't outrun them, if they have you on their radar, they will follow you, chanting "resistance is futuile", because it is". The first time you do that, it's cool. the second time, it's still cool, plus, when you introduce the borgs ability to basically take the most legendary Starship-Captain after Kirk and basically turn him into a an enemy soldier, it is making them extra-frightening.
then you bring in the fact, that you can disconnect drones from the hivemind, you add the moral ramifications of turning this possibility in a weapon, that could deal with the borg-menace in seconds.
So you have your boogie-man, the most frightening thing the boogie-man can do, you have the weak-point and more or less your exit-strategy.
So, were the borg more threatening, when they were pure hive-mind? LIke I said - in the first story, perhaps. But in the second story you introduce the fatal flaw.